Author:

Publisher: Bib. Orton IICA / CATIE

Published:

Total Pages: 92

ISBN-13:

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From Community to Consumption

From Community to Consumption

Author: Alessandro Bonanno

Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing

Published: 2010-09-08

Total Pages: 296

ISBN-13: 0857242814

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Contains papers presented at the XII World Congress of Rural Sociology held in South Korea in 2008. This book provides an international view of the advanced production in rural sociology.


Author:

Publisher: IICA

Published:

Total Pages: 6

ISBN-13:

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La profesionalización de las empresas familiares

La profesionalización de las empresas familiares

Author: Paloma Fernández Pérez

Publisher: Editorial Almuzara

Published: 2013-03

Total Pages: 181

ISBN-13: 8483567083

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Los negocios familiares dominaron y dominan la vida empresarial en España, pero apenas sabemos nada sobre el proceso de modernización de su gestión. En los dos últimos siglos estas empresas y grupos de control familiar han tenido que aprender a ir más allá de sus mercados locales y regionales y buscar formas de adaptarse a los retos de tres revoluciones tecnológicas que han cambiado su forma de producir, de relacionarse y de pensar. Los autores de La profesionalización de las empresas familiares (Pablo Díaz Morlán, Miguel A. López-Morell, Ma Mercedes Bernabé Pérez, José Luis García Ruiz, Elena San Román López, Ma Jesús Segovia Vargas, Susana Blanco García, Javier Moreno Lázaro y Paloma Fernández) destacan cómo éstas han sabido conservar sus raíces a la par que han promovido la profesionalización en la gestión.


Side Effects

Side Effects

Author: Mark Aspinwall

Publisher: Stanford University Press

Published: 2013-01-09

Total Pages: 230

ISBN-13: 0804784787

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This is a story about governance in Mexico after the labor and environmental accords—called "side agreements"—that accompanied the NAFTA treaty went into effect. These side agreements required member states to uphold and enforce their labor and environmental laws; though never codified, it was widely accepted that Mexico, in particular, had a problem with law enforcement. Side Effects explores how differences in institutional design (of the side agreements) and domestic capacity (between the labor and environment sectors) influenced norm socialization in Mexico. It argues that the acceptance of rule-of-law norms in environmental governance can be attributed to participating institutions' independence from national control, their willingness to give citizens access, and the professionalization and technical capacity of domestic bureaucrats and civil society actors. Changes in labor governance have been hampered by union confederations, longstanding corruption, and a closed opportunity structure. Going beyond a simple accounting exercise of resources devoted to enforcing the law, this book comes to grips with how best to strengthen local capacity and promote pro-norm behavior—advances essential to the task of development and democratization.